Las Vegas Review-Journal

NHL deadline anticipate­d to be a busy week

Lots of movement already begun

- By Stephen Whyno

The NHL’S top contenders did not wait until the last minute to do their shopping before the trade deadline.

League-leading Boston got bigger and tougher by adding Dmitry Orlov and Garnet Hathaway. Toronto got defensive by trading for Ryan O’reilly. The Rangers answered their New York-rival Islanders’ move for Bo Horvat by acquiring Vladimir Tarasenko.

A handful of big moves already have been made around the league, including a couple on Sunday, and many more are expected before the trade deadline Friday at noon. Patrick Kane going from Chicago to the Rangers is the most highly anticipate­d deal on the docket, and yet plenty of uncertaint­y remains about what else will shake out.

“I am certainly not going to predict where the market goes next,” Bruins general manager Don Sweeney said last week. “That’s for all teams, all 32 teams, to continue to discuss and those discussion­s will continue.”

Discussion­s led San Jose to trade winger Timo Meier to New Jersey, St. Louis sending forward Ivan Barbashev to the Golden Knights for 20-yearold prospect Zach Dean and Dallas getting 20-goal-scorer Evgenii Dadnov from Montreal for Denis Gurianov.

More are ongoing around Kane, San Jose’s Erik Karlsson, Arizona’s Jakob Chychrun, Philadelph­ia’s James van Riemsdyk and Washington’s handful of pending free agents after the perenniall­y contending Capitals went from buyers to sellers.

Prices have been high on a lot of players, most notably Chychrun, who is the top player left to change places by the deadline.

“I can see the marketplac­e taking towards the end of the week to sort out for some teams,” said Hart Levine of Puckpedia, a website that tracks the salary cap and player movement.

What has happened

The Islanders made their splash in late January, getting Horvat, a 30-goal scorer, from Vancouver and signing him to an eight-year extension.

The Rangers, after the All-star break in early February, got Tarasenko and big defenseman Niko Mikkola from St. Louis to start loading up to try to repeat or improve on their trip to the Eastern Conference final.

“You want to win, and you want to be a part of good hockey teams who can win,” Mikkola said. “The whole team is good, and we can go deep. We all know that.”

The Maple Leafs haven’t won a playoff series since

2004. Acquiring O’reilly, a playoff MVP in 2019 when the Blues won the Stanley Cup, and tough depth forward Noel Acciari sets them up better for that pursuit.

What’s about to happen

The worst-kept secret in the sport is Kane’s connection to the Rangers.

After New York got Tarasenko, thinking the price for

Meier or Kane would be too high, Kane said: “If things were going to happen … that was a team that I was definitely looking at.”

Not much of a poker face, but Kane has a full no-movement clause, meaning the three-time Cup champion who was league MVP in 2015-16 can choose where he wants to go. Rangers GM Chris Drury took care of his end of the money aspect Saturday by trading Vitali Kravtsov to Vancouver and waiving Jake Leschyshyn.

And while Kane’s name isn’t being uttered around the Rangers, there’s an uneasiness around them as the buzz seeps into the locker room.

“It always does at this time of the year,” coach Gerard Gallant said. “It’s tough on some players. But at the end of the day, you’re trying to make your team better every day and that’s what management does.”

What could happen

Sellers also are buying while still selling — mass hysteria. Well, not quite hysteria, but it’s not as simple as the haves and the have-nots at this deadline.

St. Louis, even after trading Tarasenko, Mikkola, O’reilly, Acciari and Barbashev, could also be in the market for Chychrun or other players signed beyond this season. Same goes for Washington, which won the Cup in 2018 and has made the playoffs every year since 2014 but has been beset by injuries and other events that could end the streak.

The Capitals sent Orlov and Hathaway to the Bruins and still could trade forwards Lars Eller, Conor Sheary and Marcus Johansson and defenseman Nick Jensen, Trevor van Riemsdyk and Erik Gustafsson, all of whom are pending free agents.

“It’s a little bit emotional, and it’s not fun,” said Eller, who scored the Cup-clinching goal five years ago. “Just try to stay in the moment, stay in the present.”

With Alex Ovechkin in pursuit of Wayne Gretzky’s career goals record, the Capitals aren’t going into a rebuild any time soon, and GM Brian Maclellan already has foreshadow­ed taking the picks acquired and flipping them to win again as soon as next year.

“We are in a position to use some of our current assets to retool our club and build a competitiv­e team moving forward,” he said.

 ?? David Banks The Associated Press ?? Coyotes defenseman Jakob Chychrun is one of the biggest names that could be changing teams before the end of the week.
David Banks The Associated Press Coyotes defenseman Jakob Chychrun is one of the biggest names that could be changing teams before the end of the week.

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